Between the 1400s and 1800s, 12-15 million men, women and children were forcibly transported from Africa to the Americas.
They were enslaved and forced to work in dreadful conditions on hugely profitable plantations. Britain and other countries grew wealthy on this trade in people and the goods they were forced to produce.
The National Maritime Museum’s Caird Library includes documents, records, manuscripts, books, pamphlets and photographs that together help us understand the history and legacies of transatlantic slavery.
As part of Slavery Remembrance Day, join historian S.I. Martin as he examines these documents.
Here he looks at a plantation slave inventory from the West Indies taken on 1 January 1797, and a valuation of estate slaves from 1782 in Antigua.
Warning: some of these documents contain racist or offensive terms.
Read these documents:
Find out more about Slavery Remembrance Day:
Music: Quiescent In Time by Shane Ivers –
——————————————————-
Royal Museums Greenwich is comprised of the Royal Observatory, Cutty Sark, the National Maritime Museum and the Queen’s House. Learn stories of exploration, endeavour, wonder and awe at these four historic museums, all located within a UNESCO World Heritage Site.’
Facebook:
Twitter:
Instagram:
Watch more new videos about Maritime | Synthesized by Mindovermetal English
Thank you for this